My Sunshine Away

 

26.

 

 

After this, July became August in 1991.

 

School was still two weeks away, and rumors of a new whitefly infestation had people tooling around in their yards. All this activity was made bearable by an unusual wave of cool air that came down the Mississippi River from the Ozarks of Arkansas, as if to blow directly onto the people of Woodland Hills. Temperatures dropped into the low eighties and neighbors felt friendly. I saw Mr. Kern and Mr. Simpson, for example, chatting casually across their driveway, as if their fight on the lawn that previous month was already forgotten. I saw my old buddy Randy, now a starter on the high school football team, helping his mom spray down her azaleas with Safer soap. I saw Artsy Julie walking her family dog, a standard poodle named Guinevere, up and down the sidewalk in front of our house. I saw Jason Landry burning anthills with a magnifying glass. I also saw his father, the enormous Mr. Landry, still stalking the woods for that stray. More important than all of this, though, I noticed that when people saw my mother out on the front porch, watering the potted ferns she hung from hooks, they would stop to ask her how she was doing, and she could answer them without breaking into tears. So time was moving on. Things were looking better. The hot grip of summer pretended to loosen and, everywhere you looked, people were talking again.

 

None talked more than Lindy and me.

 

Our chats about Dahmer became nightly and, once established, quickly diversified and spilled into the day. Still, we never saw each other face-to-face. We never hung out. We instead holed up in our separate bedrooms, gabbing on the phone like retirees, and went to a great amount of trouble to act as if these conversations were totally unimportant, nearly meaningless, only one step above our excruciating teenage boredom.

 

I, of course, never believed this.

 

In the week she began calling me, when I first understood that the ringing phone in my house might actually be Lindy, my world became new. Nothing could bother me. In the stretches of time between our conversations, I felt good and beneficent. I stopped sneaking into the woods behind our house to smoke dope, stopped locking myself in my room, and instead began helping my mother around the house. We hung new curtains in the living room. We pulled up weeds from our backyard patio. I changed floodlights that had been out since my dad left. I was wired with energy. I felt so eager to please that I even helped Rachel do the dishes after supper. I watched Full House episodes in her bedroom and didn’t change the channel when she left. I didn’t give her a hard time at all. It was as if I hovered over ground in those days, grinning like an idiot while Rachel taught me to drive her old Honda, a stick shift, up and down Piney Creek Road. Turn left, she’d tell me. Left! What are you doing?

 

I had no clue.

 

I was entirely lost in romantic fantasies, the kind only teenagers without experience can have. While sitting in the car with Rachel, for instance, I’d think about picking Lindy up on a date: a dozen roses on the passenger seat, the wild night ahead, maybe a kiss at full speed. “Remember,” Rachel would tell me as we drove, “God says everything happens for a reason. We have to trust that. Accepting Hannah’s death means having faith.”

 

“Yep,” I’d say, and grind the clutch. “I believe it.”

 

Or, while helping my mom in the kitchen, I’d think of Lindy and I in a domestic setting; already married by now and sweet to each other. Maybe her with a baseball cap on, a lazy ponytail tucked underneath. I could rest my hand on the small of her back and maybe help her stir something hot, and we would never be the mess that our parents were. Our lives would be easy, our home warm and spacious. All this as my mom would say, “I talked to your father yesterday. Did you know he’s moved in with that Laura?”

 

“Everything happens for a reason, Mom,” I’d tell her. “We have to believe that.”

 

“Oh, I do,” she’d say. “What on earth would I do if I didn’t?”

 

Then our telephone would ring and I’d be gone.

 

I’d drop the clothes I was folding. I wouldn’t even turn off the sink.

 

“Sure,” I’d say to Lindy. “I can talk.”

 

“No,” I’d tell her. “I’m not busy at all.”

 

On the average, our talks were uneventful. Lindy liked Camel cigarettes. Lindy hated group therapy. Lindy liked A Nightmare on Elm Street. Lindy hated Whitney Houston. Still, I always imagined that our next conversation might establish a real bond between us, might break down the walls. Perhaps we’d finally stop acting like superficial high school kids and talk instead about our deeper connections to each other, our youth together, our future. Perhaps I’d be brave and just say, Enough about Dahmer. Enough about music. Check this out, Lindy: I draw pictures of you when I’m bored. I’ve thought of several smart names for our children. I love you is all that I’m saying. Don’t you understand that? Don’t you know that we are meant for each other?

 

If Lindy only knew this basic fact that I lived with, then perhaps I could play all the songs for her that I’d written. I could ask her to a movie and she could say yes. I could open my palm and, without speaking, she could take it. I could tackle her, jokingly, and it could turn into a hug in the yard. I could finally tell her how sorry I was for that summer, for what happened to her, for my role in it, for how it changed her, and that as far as I was concerned we could forget it. We could move someplace else and build a life there.

 

I could say, What do you think about that, Lindy?

 

She could say, My bags are already packed.

 

None of this seemed impossible, but then a weird thing happened.

 

Near the end of that summer, I’d foolishly turned down a party invitation that Lindy had accepted. The party was thrown by a guy named Hanes Burke, a rich kid from Perkins who is probably doing well for himself now. He is one of those people who were born popular—the great-nephew of some long dead Louisiana senator—and, even at seventeen, he’d already established a reputation of being a good host, likely a Southern Democrat one day. There would undoubtedly be kegs at this party. Probably some light drugs if you wanted them. No cops to worry about. It was all a teenager could ask for.

 

Burke’s party itself, however, was not the strange thing. This type of A-list invitation had actually become more common for me since Hannah’s death, since I’d gotten wasted and played “Sweet Child O’ Mine” at Melinda’s. Still, my decision not to attend this particular event was a no-brainer, since I was expecting Lindy to call me after dinner, as had become her habit. She would tell me about the predictable meal she’d eaten, the intolerable conversation her parents had made her endure, and we’d sit around listening to music until she got bored or took another call. There was nothing else to do.

 

This was 1991, remember. We didn’t have the Internet. So, as teenagers, we lived on the phone. There was no webcamming, no social networking. We dreamt simply of having our own personal phone lines one day, along with uninterrupted hours to talk, and we rarely got that. No matter who we were talking to, no matter how private the conversation, parents picked up the phone accidentally, siblings demanded their time. The introduction of call waiting made all of this even worse, as it allowed aunts and uncles and people you didn’t even know to butt in. This is part of why we talked so late in the night, Lindy and I, all of us teens. This is why we looked so pale in our grunge clothes. These night hours were the only times we felt we could tell the truth without danger, the only times we could live separately from our parents while still inside of their homes. There were no cell phones. No private text messages. It was simple one on one conversation and, if it was any good at all, you had to whisper.

 

But since the bulk of our conversations that late summer revolved around how much Lindy despised everyone at our school, including Hanes Burke, it never occurred to me that she would go to his party. More important, it never occurred to me that she would go without telling me. So when Letterman came and went and the phone still hadn’t rung, I realized what had happened and grew furious. I pictured Lindy standing around at the party with a drink in her hand, laughing with people, and I felt like I had been made a fool of, like I had been lied to.

 

I took up a lonely post at my bedroom window and strummed heavy ballads on my guitar. I eyed the empty street like a parent. Finally, at around two a.m., I saw a car pull up to Lindy’s house and I panicked as it idled, wondering who she was with, who she may have been kissing, who she may have been allowing to touch her, and then I recognized the car.

 

This was good news.

 

The car belonged to Meagan Doucet, a large and unpopular girl who’d come to worship Lindy after her rape. Meagan was chameleon-like in her personality, almost fanatical in her pursuit of a social niche, and it was easy to despise her. She constantly smelled of patchouli oil, for example, but she was not a hippie. She did poorly in school, like many others, but Meagan did it without irony. She simply was not smart. As a by-product of this, she was perpetually cast in the smallest roles of our school plays—maybe some extra selling newspapers in a crowd scene, some secretary pretending to talk on a phone in the background—and yet she often bragged about being an actress. She talked about boyfriends in other towns that nobody knew and had twice faked suicide attempts for attention. I’d spoken maybe ten words to her in my life.

 

Still, I knew her story because she was Lindy’s best friend in those days, one of the few remaining at Perkins. The two of them drove around in Meagan’s blue Toyota and smoked Camel Wides. They bought glow-in-the-dark skulls and ironic bumper stickers with curse words on them at a place called Spencer’s Gifts in the mall. They looked, at all times, like they were conspiring. Yet, like so many other students, Lindy often ridiculed Meagan Doucet behind her back. She complained about her desperate personality, her stringy hair, her rich parents who gave her anything she wanted. She said that Meagan had “hellacious halitosis.” She said that she was only friends with her for her car. In other words, she said a lot of stuff that high-schoolers say. Sometimes, though, Lindy took it further.

 

Whenever it got late and Lindy seemed bored, she would tell me personal and embarrassing details about Meagan that I’m sure she’d been trusted with: sexual experiences she’d had with guys that were then mean to her, private concerns Meagan had about her body, her weight, her feminine odor, her dark nipples.